Article ID: CBB351278938

The Making of a New Race in the Early Twentieth Century Imperial Imaginary (2020-03-18)

unapi

This article contends that understandings of race and practices of racial differentiation underwent a significant epistemological shift around the first decades of the twentieth century. It reaches this conclusion via consideration of a dog breeding programme conducted by the statistician and hereditarian theorist Karl Pearson. In 1913, Pearson proclaimed that he, along with his collaborators Edward Nettleship and Charles Usher, had created a ‘new race’ of dog. Notable for its complete absence of hair pigmentation, this race appeared to demonstrate the potential that experimental animal breeding had for imperial policy-making. In differentiating his dogs from the Pekingese spaniels from which they had been produced, Pearson sought to show that ‘foreign’ animals could be made to approximate British racial standards. In Pearson's wake, animal breeding became an increasingly persuasive means by which scientists sought to legitimate racial contentions. By the 1920s, established anthropocentric approaches to human differentiation had begun to be replaced by new, animal-centred techniques and practices. Whereas nineteenth-century conceptions of race had primarily been articulated in relation to the study of human bodies, in the new race of the twentieth century, differentiation would involve study of and experimentation with bodies of all kinds – animal and human.

...More
Citation URI
data.isiscb.org/p/isis/citation/CBB351278938

This citation is part of the Isis database.

Similar Citations

Book Logan, Cheryl A.; (2013)
Hormones, Heredity, and Race: Spectacular Failure in Interwar Vienna (/p/isis/citation/CBB001214620/) unapi

Book Mackenzie Cooley; (2022)
The Perfection of Nature: Animals, Breeding, and Race in the Renaissance (/p/isis/citation/CBB506702141/) unapi

Book Müller-Wille, Staffan; Rheinberger, Hans-Jörg; (2012)
A Cultural History of Heredity (/p/isis/citation/CBB001251195/) unapi

Article Cheang, Sarah; (2006)
Women, Pets, and Imperialism: The British Pekingese Dog and Nostalgia for Old China (/p/isis/citation/CBB000660019/) unapi

Article Rushton, A. R.; (2000)
Nettleship, Pearson and Bateson: The biometric-Mendelian debate in a medical context (/p/isis/citation/CBB000110375/) unapi

Article Charles H. Pence; (2022)
Of stirps and chromosomes: Generality through detail (/p/isis/citation/CBB367382199/) unapi

Article Ogilvie, Marilyn Bailey; (2007)
Inbreeding, Eugenics, and Helen Dean King (1869--1955) (/p/isis/citation/CBB000773223/) unapi

Chapter Kevles, Daniel J.; (2011)
New Blood, New Fruits: Protections for Breeders and Originators, 1789--1930 (/p/isis/citation/CBB001221559/) unapi

Article Roger J. Wood; (2015)
Darbishire expands his vision of heredity from Mendelian genetics to inherited memory (/p/isis/citation/CBB211130319/) unapi

Article Marianna Szczygielska; (2022)
Undoing Extinction: The Role of Zoos in Breeding Back the Tarpan Wild Horse, 1922–1945 (/p/isis/citation/CBB178294700/) unapi

Article Tyrrell, Brian; (2015)
Bred for the Race: Thoroughbred Breeding and Racial Science in the United States, 1900--1940 (/p/isis/citation/CBB001510455/) unapi

Book Michael Worboys; Julie-Marie Strange; Neil Pemberton; (2018)
The Invention of the Modern Dog: Breed and Blood in Victorian Britain (/p/isis/citation/CBB396199300/) unapi

Article Emily Stark; Stephen Hoover; Alexandra DeCesare; Elan Barenholtz; (December 2018)
Medicine Has Gone to the Dogs: Deep Learning and Robotic Olfaction to Mimic Working Dogs (/p/isis/citation/CBB218791424/) unapi

Article Brad Bolman; (2022)
Dogs for Life: Beagles, Drugs, and Capital in the Twentieth Century (/p/isis/citation/CBB399574473/) unapi

Book Michael Worboys; (2023)
Doggy people: The Victorians who made the modern dog (/p/isis/citation/CBB958196913/) unapi

Book Edmund Russell; (2018)
Greyhound Nation: A Coevolutionary History of England, 1200-1900 (/p/isis/citation/CBB501862278/) unapi

Thesis Feller, D A; (cited 2011)
The Hunter's Gaze: Charles Darwin and the Role of Dogs and Sport in Nineteenth Century Natural History (/p/isis/citation/CBB001567341/) unapi

Authors & Contributors
Worboys, Michael
Berry, Dominic
Cheang, Sarah
Feller, D A
Kevles, Daniel J.
Logan, Cheryl A.
Journals
Journal of the History of Biology
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Environment and History
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine
Publishers
University of Chicago Press
Cambridge University
Yale University
Cambridge University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
Manchester University Press
Concepts
Breeding
Heredity
Dogs; cats
Mendelism; Mendelian inheritance
Race
Genetics
People
Pearson, Karl
Bateson, William
Darbishire, Arthur Dukinfield
Darwin, Charles Robert
Galton, Francis
Johannsen, Wilhelm Ludvig
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century
18th century
21st century
Renaissance
Places
Great Britain
United States
Germany
England
Vienna (Austria)
Austria
Institutions
United States. Eugenics Record Office
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment